Product Description

Orphan heiress and Scotswoman Regan MacLauren goes from a bride to a widow as she's told her husband was murdered. As a result, Regan loses her memory and with it her place in the world. Laid and warrior, Iain Campbell is waiting for the love he knows God will bring him. But a woman near death and without a memory isn't quite what he expected.

Publisher's Description

Orphan heiress and Scotswoman, Regan MacLaren, is a bride of but one day when her husband is murdered. As a result, Regan loses her memory and with it her place in the world. Laird and warrior, Iain Campbell, is waiting for the love he knows God will bring him. But a woman near death and without a memory isn't quite what he expected.

With their clans feuding, Regan and Iain should never have met. But, when their paths cross, they come to know and love each other--only to encounter more obstacles in their way. Iain's a suspect in the murder of Regan's husband, and he soon becomes a stumbling block to unholy ambitions that may well lead to more deaths, including his own. Will betrayal and suspicion force them apart forever? Or can their love help heal their clans and their land?

Author Bio

Kathleen Morgan is the author of the Brides of Culdee Creek series as well as All Good Gifts, The Christkindl's Gift, Giver of Roses, and Child of the Mist, the first book in the These Highland Hills series.

Orphan Drummond heiress Regan MacLaren is a bride of only one day when her husband is murdered. Left alone to thwart the revenge her family seeks on her husband's killer, Regan suffers a terrible fall and loses her memory- and with it her place in the world. Meanwhile, laird and warrior Iain Campbell is waiting for the love he knows God will bring him. But a woman near death and without a memory isn't quite what he expected. And so begin enormous challenges for Regan and Iain to overcome the unholy ambitions of others while love takes them by surprise. But will betrayal and suspicion force them apart forever? Or can their love help heal their clans and their land?

[I so enjoyed reading this book, mostly because I like Iain very much and felt bad about his unreturned love for Anne in "Child of the Mist". He is actually the only hero of a Christian fiction book I can think of who isn't a jerk, boor, etc. He's a godly man, kind, warm, striving to be like Christ. That doesn't mean he's perfect, though, and the reader finds out he has his struggles. Still, he's about the only male protagonist that I don't want to take by the throat and strangle, and that's saying something.]